Ligonier Banner., Volume 35, Number 40, Ligonier, Noble County, 3 January 1901 — Page 3

’r U R a\\"\»?k,‘x;. : H ~ ;’J",‘; mmmw% =\ 4:l‘. “h.,‘__w, o PR~ RLb ‘ - -\AWM = e AAAAA A A A A A A AA A A PP I SOME HANDY DEVICES. One Is an Appliance for Corn Shell=ing, Another a Lever and the Third a Cabbage Puller. In the cut dre shown three devices of widely differing application, but all are very practical. A is an appliance for corn shelling on a small scale. A piece of board about two feet long is narrowed down to about one inch at one end. Near narrow end, on under side,a strip of hoop iron is nailed with edge of strip projecting one-eighth of an inch and turned down slightly. Cut shows board inverted to make this .plain. To use the sheller, sit on board, %j /".,I \ . W M= : s ‘] \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ " fl (&R \ A f,m R S ‘ THREE HANDY DEVICES. and draw ear of corn up across irom strip, using both hands. How to make a useful lever for prying out stones, lifting timbers, ete., is shown by B in this cut. An old horseshoe isheated and the points hammered together a little closer than usual. The ‘ “shoe i{s then bolted on the large end | of a stout pole, ten or twelve feet long, with the points projecting about onebalf inch. : A handy little device for pulling cabbage, etc., is shown by C. Use a light forked stick about four feet long for the lever and a smaller forked stick, or limb, one foot long, for support. Lay | the long stick in fork: of short one, and tie together with string as illustrated. TPack a small cleat or crosspiece on foot of fulecrum stick to prevent its sinking into ground. The forked end of leveris slipped under :cabbage, and prying down on the other end does the work. This will save a great deal of time when in use, and can be made in five minutes. —J. G. Allshouse, in Ohio Farmer. DANGEROUS WASHOUTS. In Nine Cases Out of Ten They Can Be Prevented or Checked by Simple Means. During the times of rain much damage is done to fields and roads by washouts. The continued rains loosen the soil, and when the. short, heavy showers come the rush of water tears up the loosened soil and carries it away, and in this way deep ditches are torn in summer-fallowed fields and in fields under cultivation. In the same way roads, especially hillsides, are badly torn up, causing danger to travel and much expense for repair. There is a simple and effective way both to prevent this damage from going beyond control and to repair it, no matter how large the gutters are. Take fine hay, weeds, straw or even briers, if not too large, and scatter a few handfuls in a place in the bottom of the washout. Put . 'stones on this, to keep it in place. Twenty or 30 feet farther down stream put in another check like this, and so on throughout the washout. Of course, if the gully is larger and much water comes down it, more hay end heavier stones must be used. The idea is that these checks slacken the speed, and hence the tearing power of the stream, and also hold all sediment. Dams put in a deep washout 30 rods long in a wheat field in the fall, at intervals of 30 feet or so, caused the filling up of the ditch byl spring. Deep and 3Jangerous washouts on hillsides on the public high-| way can either be prevented or remedied by checks of the above kind properly put in and looked after from time to time. The usual way of dealing with these hillside washouts is to let them go until the hill becomes impassable; then make a job of grading, etc., at an expense of from $3O to $5O to the county. Here a stitch in time would save 90. The washouts in dams of ponds can be repaired in much the same way.—Troy éN. Y.} Fines, JUST A LITTLE HIRT. A Neat and Decidedly Successful Way of Securely Bracing a Corner Fence Post. The wrong way to keep the strain on a corner post of a wire fehce from pullN YN — 4} : ‘l". ' .'! ' . ,/// !‘ k«’,,’// , % 5 A v 2 277, \': 7. BRACE FOR CORNER POSTS. ing it out of the ground is to load it with a quarter ton of rocks. A neater and more successful method is to run a cable of wire from'the top o' the post to a stone anchored in the ground six or eight feet from its base, in a line with the fence. That will call iqr twoat each corner.—o Orange Judd Farmer. Preserving Fence Poats, , A cheap and effectual method of preventing the rotting of fence posts is- said to be practiced by French farmers, The posts are piled in a ~ tank and the whole thickly covered fiffi-‘gfléklmflfiek is gradually Bs ol e b o eSR B b ed »e 1o estend ~ above the surface of the ground when _;» @E»; wf;;_ ‘% e »I;:g”‘gf"f; :: . the period of durability of the post.

THREE PEACH GROWERS.

They Are Types of Characters with Which All of Us Are More or Less Familiar, -

One of the fundamental laws of education is, that we learn by experience. Theories ‘are all right, but practice is better. During my term of 14 years in the fruit business I observed three different classes of peach growers. The first class are those who are determined in their eflforts. They are wide awake, because they know it is not the business that makes the man, but that it is the man that makes the business. 4 The second class are those who save at the spigot and lose at the bung. They set out their orchards and cultivate very little and only visit their orchards about the time they expect to find ripe fruit on the trees. They are good salesmen enough to sell anything from a red beet up to a strawstack. They will by hard work manage to hammer ehough money out of the business to pay the cost of production. : Then comes the third class. The only way I can see for those to make money in the peach business is to present the nursery man with the money and positively refuse to take the trees. They would thus save the time and labor in preparing the soil and planiting the trees, and not lose the use of the greund. I believe in growing first-class peaches, and 'in having everything clean from the orchard to the curbstone. If I want to do business, I must attend to my business. I will follow peach culture as long as I can keep the soil in a condition to sponge water. It may not, however, be expected that fruit will again bring the high price any more than wheat, corn, iron, etc. Nothing brings the high price it once did. But what we want is that our peach crop will sell for enough money to allow us a fair. profit. Of course, competition may be sharp, as it is in all other classes of business in the country.—J. F. Boyer, before Pennsylvania Horticultural Society. .

THE OSAGE ORANGE.

For Posts and Telephone Poles It Has No Egqual and for Beauty It Is Unexcelled.

In sections where it will thrive I believe it will pay to plant the Osage orange for posts and telephone-poles. It has one fault, and that is, when it has become seasoned one can scarcely drive any sort of a nail into it. Its lasting qaulities when used as posts exceed that of any wood I know of. It grows quite rapidly, and should be pruned about twice a year to make good posts or poles. It will pay those who have Osage hedges to allow one plant about every 15 or 20 feet to grow up for posts or poles. If they are kept properly trimmed up they will not injure the hedge any and will soon make good posts. When cut they shou!d be sawed off close to the ground during the win~ ‘ter season; then a thicket of shoots will sprout from the stump the following spring, and close the gap. In half a mile of hedge one can grow about all the posts he will need. All that is needed to make straight poles or posts is timely and careful pruning. 1 have known one Osage post eight inches in diameter to outlast three white-oak posts in succession. Barbed wires or woven-wire fencinig can be fastened to these posts by méans of short pieces of wire.—Fred Grundy, in Farm and Fireside.

WHEELBARROW TANK.: Easily Made and Usefdil for a Thoue sand and One Purposes About " Every Farm. ; The arrangement shown in the cut is very convenient for numerous purposes about a farm. It is a square, galvanized iron tank, with sockets on each side to run a couple of handles e o i / { umuuufl I 3 g = s i) e --‘-i-'—"?,'_;_ — (= e e i, e T WHEELBARROW TANK. ‘through. Attach an old barrow wheel to these handles and the tank can be wheeled anywhere and tipped over with great ease. The tank can be used to carry skim milk to calves or pigs, to remove kitchen slops to the }manure heap (thus doing away with ‘a sink drain) or for many other purposes that will readily occur to any~one.—American Agriculturist. ‘ Correct Farming Always Pays. There is a,'&sort of picturesqueness about women farmers which is inspiring. A great many women to-day are 'making farms pay handsomely, in !many cases they have been compelled to make the most of their chances, and as their chances were those afforded by a few acres of land they set about to do their work scientifically. A Nebraska woman has made a magnificent success raising poultry; a Kansas woman has achieved fame 'a,nd fortune raising swine; an Indiana woman is widely known as a successTful dairywoman and breeder of Jersey ‘cattle; a Pennsylvania girkhas made ‘a fortune growing violets. So it goes. Rural occupation affords recompense for all if correct principles be applied in its administration. — Farmers’ Voice. : Flower Seed Plantations. Southern California has several prominent growers of fine double petunias ‘and other plants. The rapid advance of the California sweet pea seed in popularity is most marvelous. Nasturtiums, eosmos, verbenas, petunias and asters ‘are quite suecessfully grown, So im[iportant a factor have the California Sweet pea growers become to the seed [-;_tr_ade thatsomedealersgothere annually from the east to inspect the growing crops and to hunt for novelties in Féafi“‘m pea line. Flower seeds are grown in g number of places throughout the United States, but only a portion of the trade is supplied with homee e

APPOINTS A BOY.

Empress-Dowager Selects a Fifteen-Year-Old Lad to Be Emperor of China.

Tomdon, Dec. 29.—Private advices from the province of Shan Si say,” ‘wires the Shanghai correspondent of the Standard, “that while the court was sojourning at Tai Yuen Fu the empress dowager secretly appointed a-new emperor, with the title Tung Hsu. He is a 15-year-old boy, who was taken to Sian Fu in the imperial yellow chair. This explains the permission given to Emperor Kwang Su to return to Peking. o “Emperor Kwang Su has notified the reform party that he is returning to the capital and will need their assistance.” ' e Washington, Dec. 29.—The Chinese embassy here is without information on the reports that Emperor Kwang Su does not approve the demands submitted by the powers. For some days, however, the view has prevailed in Chinese quarters that the terms were so harsh that it would be difficult to secure their acceptance. A report was in circulation in diplomatic quarters that one of the Chinese envoys was opposed to accepting the terms, but it is not known whether this report came from any authoritative source. It was understood, also, that Li Hung Chang’s illness might have some effect in retarding the negotiations. The state department has received nothing from Minister Conger to indicate that the emperor opposes the acceptance of the peace terms. The officials here continue to be hopeful that there will be an early acceptance. The points' referred to as objectionable to the Chinese, chiefly the maintenance of legation guards, arée not regarded here as likely to form serious barriers to an agreement, as all of the powers probably will give visible evidence, at an early day, of their purpose to reduce the legation guard as soon as China shows good faith in accepting the conditions.

In some diplomatic quarters it is believed that the reported opposition of the emperor will not lead to a rejection of the demand, but to the submission of a counter proposition of inquiry from China. This is considered the natural course of diplomatic controversy, and it would have the advantage to China of saving her rights to accept the terms at a later period, while in the meantime seeking to reduce their severity.

MAIL POUCH STOLEN.

Unknown Thieves Secure an Amount of Money at Wyandotte, Mich.

Detroit, Mich., Dec. 29.—A mail pouch containing $lOO,OOO in negotiable paper and an unknown amount of money was stolen from the Wyandotte (Mich.) Michigan Central railroad passenger station some time Thursday night. The last mailfor Wyandotte arrivesat 10:28 on the Michigan Central, and owing to the lateness of the hour it is left in the station until morning. When the two mail sacks were thrown from the train Thursday night Night Operator Richert threw the pouches under -a seat in the corner of the waiting-rcom. He then went to his home in Detroit. Friday when Mail Carrier John McCleary came to the station for the mail sacks he missed one. About the same time George Bessy, a driver of an oil wagon, reported at the station that a pouch ripped open and empty, was behind an oil tank a short distance from the station. The J. B. Ford alkali works is one of the principal industries.of Wyandotte, and about the time of the finding of the pouch two office employes brought in a number of checks and opened envelopes they had found strewn along the railroad track. Postmaster Johnson, of Wyandotte, was notified and went at once to the scene of the robbery. The trail of the thief was marked along the railroad track by strewn letters, checks and drafts. Most of the mail was intended for the J. B. Ford company, and a force of clerks was sént out to collect the let-

ters strewn along the track. The reason for this activity on the part of the J. B. Ford company was that J. B. Ford, Jr., said he expected a draft from New York for $40,000. The draft did mot come Friday, and it is believed that the robber or robbers took it with other valuable papers from the pouch.

THREE CHILDREN CREMATED.

Little Ones Left in House by Parents < Perish Before Help Can

Reach Them,

Olympia, Wash., Dec. 29.—The three children of Mr. L. Lavery, a daughter aged four years, a son aged two and a six-months-old infant, have been

burned todeath near here. The parents were temporarily absent, leaving a hired man at work cutting wood about 200 yards from the house. A few minutes after the parents left he discovered the house on fire. Before he could reach the scene an explosion occurred, supposed to be of dynamite stored in the upper part of the building. The building was entirely consumed® and the bodies of the two eldest children were found where the bedroom had been. The infant was in the cradle in the front room. A few charred bounes were all that was left. :

Storm Saves Ship from Burning. Victoria, B. C., Dec. 29.—The British ships Melville Island and Almora on their arrival at Sydney had a tale to tell of tßeir narrow escape from destruction with all on board. Fire broke out in the Melville Island on Oectober 28 as she was bound to. Sydney and for days her crew was kept busy fightng the flames. The fire on the Almora started on August 9, but two days after she was caught in a heavy gale which sent seas on board, and to this fact the captain says the vessel owed her salvation, for the fire was soon extinguished after the gale. ettt ettt ‘College Building Burned. Springfield, 0., Dec. 29.—Hamma divinity hall, on the Wittenberg coHdege grounds, burned to the ground Friday night. It was occupied by the theological seminary, and was the/,ggft'of Dr. M. V. Hamma, of Washington,'D. C., to the institution. The loss on the building will be about $20,000, covered by insurance. The building contained recitation rooms gnd was the dormitory of the students, and all the furniture and their libraries were destroyed, none being insured. The building also contained valuable libraries of Drs. Ort and Breckenridge. £oN :

CLOSENESS PERSONIFIED.

Dreamed He Had to Pay a Dollar for a Cab and Was Afraid to Go to Sieep Again,

There’s a good 'story told of a young fellow here noted for his closeness. “He went to spend the night with a friend. During the entire night he betrayed much restlessness, which kept the host wide awake, and finaily the slumberer betrayed signs of violent emotion. ‘“He’s going to have a nightmare,” said the friend, “but he always frumbles s 0 when you wake him up that hate to disturb him.” He waited awhile lon%er, sitting up in bed staring at the miserable sleeper, and, finaily becoming alarmed, he roused him. He sprang up in bed, glared wildly around and said: “Where am I? I don’t seé the storm?” . “Why, here in my room,” said his host soothingiy; “you remember you stayed all night with me? I beg your pardon for waking you up, but you carried on so I had to.” “Beg your pardon,” %as'ped the guest. “I shall never be grateful enough to you. I .dreamed I was out with Miss Bud and a terrible storm came up, and my shoes were new, and I was just ordering a coupe for two when you roused me. Old boy, you have saved me a dcllar.” : And the host says he was actually afraid to go to sleep again that night for fear the coupe would come, says the Louisville Times.

VICE REWARDED.

The Oracular Passenger Gives the Conductor a Tip and Gets Left Himself,

“The man who gave me that,” said the conductor to the only passenger in the car. “must have thought I was a chump.” The passenger examined the lead fivecent piece with a smile, says Puck. “You’re stuck,” he said, oracularl‘y. “Unless,” he added, unscrupulously, “you can pass it off.” : . “T wouldn’t do that,” returned the conductor, polishing the bogus coin on his coat sieeve. ‘‘Besides, no one would take it.” “Not alone, but you might slip it in among two or three good ones,” suggested the passenfer. _ The conductor shook his head virtuously, as the car began to fill up. An hour later the ex-passenger.fished up some small change to buy a cigar, and the first thing he saw was a lead five-cent piece. “I gave him a quarter,” he mused, “and he gave me four nickels in ‘change. The man,” he added, still musing, ‘“who gave me that, must have thought I was a chump.” 2

There Is a Class of People

Who are injured by the use of coffee. Recently there has been placed in all the grocery stores a new preparation called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains, that-takes the place of coffee. ’lPhe most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over 1 as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15 cts..and 25 cts. per package. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.

The average girl thinks that getting a letter with a sealing wax stamp and an initial on it, is next to getting a letter bearing a cvat-of-arms.—Atchison Globe.

Lane’s Family Medicine.

‘Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts iently on the liver and kidneys. éures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. :

Perils of Civilization,

If we are driven to the hard labor of opening oysters for thg sake of avoiding Fre—servaline and to milking cows to keep clear of formaldehyde it isevidentthat the highest civilization has not lightened our burdens,’ but rather added.to them. By the way. embalmed beef has gone out of fashion, hasn’t it?—Detroit Free Press.

You cannot be cheerful if you have dyspepsia. You won’t have dyspepsia if you chew White’s “Yucatan.”

The Marches, Perhaps,

Mrs. Proudleigh—Yes, my daughter plays the piano by ear entirely. ’ Mrs. Nexdoughre—lndeed? Sometimes it sounds to me as if she were using her foot. —Baltimore American.

Trapsposed.

Beatrice—Did youobserve Mr. Flashleigh’s beautiful hose? They’re the most exquisite clockwork. . _ Sl S SAR

~ Constance—lfear you have Mr. Flashleigh transposed; the machinery you speak of, m}lr 'dear, is in his head.—Ohio State Journal. ; 4

Not the Genuine Article.

_“]That girl«is only an imitation Boston girl.” , - “What makes you think so?” “She safs ‘whom to’ instead of ‘to whom.’ ”’—lndianapolis Journal.

Little Left to Stand On.

A scientist has now arisen who declares the Gulf stream is a myth. If science continues its devastating way we shall soon have nothing left to cling to but esoteric Buddhism and the significance of cat tracks. —N. Y. Press. -

Cynicism,

“At this,”” wrote the author, “the great, strong man broke down and wept. For the first time in her young life Lucine saw that agonizing sight—a man’s tears.” Here the Demon of Cynicism, which so pervades our literature, moved. him to write: “For none g Lucille’s folks were given to the jag habit.” ' Now he realized he had done wrong, yet left the line unchanged, with the perversity of genius.—lndianapo’is Press.

It is not at all infrequent for a man te meet death bravely, for there is much nobility in the sons of men. But rarer and finer yet is the courage to live bravely on in the face of age. decaying strength and facultgl‘!‘s, ill health, poverty, disillusion, and the falling away of friends.—AtchNisop Globe. '. :

MecJigeer— “What do you think of Jigley marrying that girl who ‘stutters so?” Thingumbob—“He’s in luck. She certainly won’t be able to talk to him.” MedJigger—‘““Nonsense! They say she’s very determined. Just imagine how frightfully long it will take her to give him a piece of her mind.”’—Philadelphia Press. -

Kash—“What was Jones fired for?” DeSales—“ For giving away one of the trade secrets, I believe.” Kash—*“You don’t say?”’ DeSales—“Yes, he told one of the customers that the boss was an old blockhead, and It,he boss overheard him."”"—Philadelphia ress. :

Sure Sign.—Mamma—*“You have become very fond of Mr. Hueeard in quite a ghort time.” Daughter—“ Why. mamma. what makes vou think that?”’ Mamma—“T overheard you telling him last night that he was 'l;oo hateful for anything.” ”—Philadelphia Tress.,

Her Conscience Wasn’t Troubled. — “If any call, Norah, be sure tgo tell them T am out. What are vou waiting for? Tt doesn’t disturb your conscience, does it?”* “Oh, no, ma’am. I’'m hardened to it. T’ve werl-od far sncietv 'iars before, ma’am “¥— RO e

o R T A R N X ot < G R v e 1 — SCLRNNRN R F S SRR NNR AN x\\‘\v\‘\.\r-\:fi\\‘ SO SN NN o RS S T by YRE T R I SRR R G O ORI WY e - A 7 y 5 7 B e , o 8 i {9 7 9 " | ///l‘,/ A A N R R A A N R T

: For Infants and Chfldren i in Bears , Y . _ - Use The - * For Signature AN 1777 v Thity Years of % 4 “* The Kind You Have Always Bought WM vl vnoemnnes,

Of the U. S. Treasury Recommends > Peruna. ——— i = AN _%, 'QQ ‘\v‘ N, : \a o ) i) Q \ 2 1((4\\: . T N ‘ Z y R AR ‘ ) NN\t f'/" \\.“\.‘\\"’\\\ | &%\\\ A\ GBS ‘i{\ Ry TR // = = A ‘5:" Y, 2 //// ,’.'&\\\ \\ ) .;;'Aif;if;*‘f?\\\ : /5 ) \\\ \4 :I_'_‘;\'7.'./ ,s\“.\\‘b . 2 |l &\\\\\\ e \\ o \,\\ \\\\\’ 7y \\\ . WIS/ LERAY RN Dr Llewe. yu ..urdafi Dr. Liewellyn Jordan, Medical Examiner of U. 8. Treasury Department, graduate of Columbia College, and who served three years at West Point, has the following to say of Peruna: “ Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from Your wonderful remedy. One short month has brought forth a vast change and |1 now consider myseifa well man atter months of suffering. Fellow sufferers, Peruna will cure you.” Catarrh is a systemic disease curable only by systematic treatment. A remedy that cures catarrh must aim directly at the depressed nerve centers. This is what Peruna does. . Peruna immediately invigorates the nerve-centers which give vitality to the mucous membranes. Then catarrh disap}gears. Then catarrh is permanently cured. eruna cures catarrh wherever located. Peruna is not a guess nor an experiment—it is an absolute scientific certainty. Peruna has no substitutes—no rivals. Insist upon having Peruna. A free book written by Dr. Hartman, on the subject of catarrh in its differ= ent phases and stages, will be sent free to any address by I'he Peruna Medicine Co.. Columbus, Ohio.

WHAT THE WORKERS TELL US. In 1890 the mineral production of the United States amounted to $619,000,000 and in 1899 to-$976,000,000. The American red gum wood is now being largely employed in London for street paving purposes. ‘ The Danes export the best and highest priced butter in the world, and for their own use buy cheap butter from the United States. Boston is the headquarters of the copper-mining business of the United States, and makes a tidy profit on it. The Boston copper companies. paid $23,383,100 in dividends in 1900.

HER HEART WAS TOUCHED.

A Soutih Dakota Mother and Her Little Girl Express Their Gratitude in an Open Letter,

Folsom, Custer Co., South Dakota, Dec. 31, 1900 (Special).—Mrs. H. D. Hyde has given for publication a letter expressing her unbounded gratitude to Dodd’s Kidney Pills for the double cure of herself and little daughter. Mrs. Hyde has been troubled with pains in her heart for over three years, and for a long time her little girl suffered from weak kidneys. The grateful lady does not seem able to find words strong enough to express her gratitude. She has written the following:

I cannot say too much in praise of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. They are the greatest kidney and heart medicine I ever used. I had been troubled for over three years with a severe pain in my heart, which entirely disappeared after I had taken a few doses of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I also gave them tomy little girl, whose kidneys had been weak, and she commenced to improve from the very first dose. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are certainly a wonderful medicine. I would be pleased to have this, my statement, published, as I feel it my duty to let others know just what the Pills will do for'them. | MRS. H. D. HYDE. Dodd’s Kidney Pills always cure. 50¢. a box. All dealers. 2

ABSOLUTE SECURITY. - Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. oo T T s

_ (/ ‘NN ' 4 % J /’;.\\, ~\;\ AR r"‘ S = —=——— ,‘“\ - 7 //- ——~ | .= = ‘ 7 - AN N / 2 (\ 5 . 2 P ) e \? g - ,/4‘3::)—,‘ 2 O g e \ : . : 09 @ :33 ; And every Distressing Irritation of the Skin and Scalp Instantly Relieved by a Bath with : R a 3 “4 T : ‘/ T ? fi ‘—%‘} Db e .. And a single anointing with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients, This treatment, when followed in severe cases by mild doses of CUTICURA RESOLVENT, to cool and cleanse the blood, is the most speedy, permanent, and economical cure for torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and pimply skin and scalp humors with loss of hair ever compounded. | ' USE CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women and mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. -No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beau~ tifiers to use any otherss. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair,and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz, TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and BEST ‘baby<soap in the world, Gl ety Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor. i eei 1t sel Phl T Gok e @ticura to lnstantly allay itching, infammation, and irritation, and soothe i : heal. and CURA RESOLVENT (50¢.), to cool and cleanse the blood. T Bciing, Diiraing, s foaly Skt el Ak pioat erns g THE SET. $|.25 mkonuuagl’u fails. ysaa t’};roul;hough.yo,-‘:d“,"'“"m

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